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SciCrunch Registry is a curated repository of scientific resources, with a focus on biomedical resources, including tools, databases, and core facilities - visit SciCrunch to register your resource.

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http://www.nitrc.org/projects/reliability/

Data collected from subjects scanned 3 times (V1, V2, V3), with V1 and V2 on a scanner, V3 on another scanner in another site. Resting state blood oxygenation level dependent functional MRI (BOLD fMRI), pseudo continuous arterial spin labeling (pCASL), and high resolution 3D T1 imaging were performed under eyes open (EO) and eyes closed (EC) conditions.

Proper citation: Intra- and inter-scanner reliability of RS-fMRI BOLD and ASL with eyes closed vs. eyes open (RRID:SCR_016935) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_018165

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://www.broadinstitute.org/pubs/MitoCarta/

Collection of genes encoding proteins with strong support of mitochondrial localization. Inventory of genes encoding mitochondrial-localized proteins and their expression across 14 mouse tissues. Database is based on human and mouse RefSeq proteins that are mapped to NCBI Gene loci. MitoCarta 2.0 inventory provides molecular framework for system-level analysis of mammalian mitochondria.

Proper citation: MitoCarta (RRID:SCR_018165) Copy   


http://software.broadinstitute.org/gsea/msigdb/index.jsp

Collection of annotated gene sets for use with Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) software.

Proper citation: Molecular Signatures Database (RRID:SCR_016863) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006281

    This resource has 5000+ mentions.

http://galaxyproject.org/

Open, web-based platform providing bioinformatics tools and services for data intensive genomic research. Platform may be used as a service or installed locally to perform, reproduce, and share complete analyses. Galaxy automatically tracks and manages data provenance and provides support for capturing the context and intent of computational methods. Galaxy Community has created Galaxy instances in many different forms and for many different applications including Galaxy servers, cloud services that support Galaxy instances, and virtual machines and containers that can be easily deployed for your own server.The Galaxy team is a part of BX at Penn State, and the Biology and Mathematics and Computer Science departments at Emory University.Training Infrastructure as a Service (TIaaS) is a service offered by some UseGalaxy servers to specifically support training use cases.

Proper citation: Galaxy (RRID:SCR_006281) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006623

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

http://users.loni.ucla.edu/~shattuck/brainsuite/

Suite of image analysis tools designed to process magnetic resonance images (MRI) of the human head. BrainSuite provides an automatic sequence to extract genus-zero cortical surface mesh models from the MRI. It also provides a set of viewing tools for exploring image and surface data. The latest release includes graphical user interface and command line versions of the tools. BrainSuite was specifically designed to guide its users through the process of cortical surface extraction. NITRC has written the software to require minimal user interaction and with the goal of completing the entire process of extracting a topologically spherical cortical surface from a raw MR volume within several minutes on a modern workstation. The individual components of BrainSuite may also be used for soft tissue, skull and scalp segmentation and for surface analysis and visualization. BrainSuite was written in Microsoft Visual C using the Microsoft Foundation Classes for its graphical user interface and the OpenGL library for rendering. BrainSuite runs under the Windows 2000 and Windows XP Professional operating systems. BrainSuite features include: * Sophisticated visualization tools, such as MRI visualization in 3 orthogonal views (either separately or in 3D view), and overlayed surface visualization of cortex, skull, and scalp * Cortical surface extraction, using a multi-stage user friendly approach. * Tools including brain surface extraction, bias field correction, voxel classification, cerebellum removal, and surface generation * Topological correction of cortical surfaces, which uses a graph-based approach to remove topological defects (handles and holes) and ensure a tessellation with spherical topology * Parameterization of generated cortical surfaces, minimizing a harmonic energy functional in the p-norm * Skull and scalp surface extraction

Proper citation: BrainSuite (RRID:SCR_006623) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006450

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

http://bioinformatics.ubc.ca/ermineJ/

Data analysis software for gene sets in expression microarray data or other genome-wide data that results in rankings of genes. A typical goal is to determine whether particular biological pathways are doing something interesting in the data. The software is designed to be used by biologists with little or no informatics background. A command-line interface is available for users who wish to script the use of ermineJ. Major features include: * Implementation of multiple methods for gene set analysis: ** Over-representation analysis ** A resampling-based method that uses gene scores ** A rank-based method that uses gene scores ** A resampling-based method that uses correlation between gene expression profiles (a type of cluster-enrichment analysis). * Gene sets receive statistical scores (p-values), and multiple test correction is supported. * Support of the Gene Ontology terminology; users can choose which aspects to analyze. * User files use simple text formats. * Users can modify gene sets or create new ones. * The results can be visualized within the software. * It is simple to compare multiple analyses of the same data set with different settings. * User-definable hyperlinks are provided to external sites to allow more efficient browsing of the results. * For programmers, there is a command line interface as well as a simple application programming interface that can be used to plug ermineJ functionality into your own code Platform: Online tool, Windows compatible, Mac OS X compatible, Linux compatible, Unix compatible

Proper citation: ErmineJ (RRID:SCR_006450) Copy   


http://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena/

Public archive providing a comprehensive record of the world''''s nucleotide sequencing information, covering raw sequencing data, sequence assembly information and functional annotation. All submitted data, once public, will be exchanged with the NCBI and DDBJ as part of the INSDC data exchange agreement. The European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) captures and presents information relating to experimental workflows that are based around nucleotide sequencing. A typical workflow includes the isolation and preparation of material for sequencing, a run of a sequencing machine in which sequencing data are produced and a subsequent bioinformatic analysis pipeline. ENA records this information in a data model that covers input information (sample, experimental setup, machine configuration), output machine data (sequence traces, reads and quality scores) and interpreted information (assembly, mapping, functional annotation). Data arrive at ENA from a variety of sources including submissions of raw data, assembled sequences and annotation from small-scale sequencing efforts, data provision from the major European sequencing centers and routine and comprehensive exchange with their partners in the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC). Provision of nucleotide sequence data to ENA or its INSDC partners has become a central and mandatory step in the dissemination of research findings to the scientific community. ENA works with publishers of scientific literature and funding bodies to ensure compliance with these principles and to provide optimal submission systems and data access tools that work seamlessly with the published literature. ENA is made up of a number of distinct databases that includes the EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Database (Embl-Bank), the newly established Sequence Read Archive (SRA) and the Trace Archive. The main tool for downloading ENA data is the ENA Browser, which is available through REST URLs for easy programmatic use. All ENA data are available through the ENA Browser. Note: EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Database (EMBL-Bank) is entirely included within this resource.

Proper citation: European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) (RRID:SCR_006515) Copy   


http://www.brainvoyager.com

Brain Innovation B.V. is developing scientific software in the field of human and animal brain imaging, neural network simulation and computer-based experimental control. Our current major product, BrainVoyager QX, is a commercially available cross-platform neuroimaging tool, which is used in hundreds of labs across the planet. Turbo-BrainVoyager is an easy to use program for real-time data analysis, which allows to observe a subject''s or patient''s brain activity during an ongoing functional MRI scanning session. TMS Neuronavigator provides the hard- and software to navigate a TMS coil to desired anatomical or functionally defined brain regions. We also provide free software products. BrainVoyager Brain Tutor allows to learn about brain areas by clicking on rotatable 3D brain models. StimulDX is a powerful stimulation software based on Microsofts DirectX API, which we will make available for free download in the near future.

Proper citation: Brain Innovation: Home of the BrainVoyager Product Family (RRID:SCR_006660) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006695

    This resource has 5000+ mentions.

http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro

Service providing functional analysis of proteins by classifying them into families and predicting domains and important sites. They combine protein signatures from a number of member databases into a single searchable resource, capitalizing on their individual strengths to produce a powerful integrated database and diagnostic tool. This integrated database of predictive protein signatures is used for the classification and automatic annotation of proteins and genomes. InterPro classifies sequences at superfamily, family and subfamily levels, predicting the occurrence of functional domains, repeats and important sites. InterPro adds in-depth annotation, including GO terms, to the protein signatures. You can access the data programmatically, via Web Services. The member databases use a number of approaches: # ProDom: provider of sequence-clusters built from UniProtKB using PSI-BLAST. # PROSITE patterns: provider of simple regular expressions. # PROSITE and HAMAP profiles: provide sequence matrices. # PRINTS provider of fingerprints, which are groups of aligned, un-weighted Position Specific Sequence Matrices (PSSMs). # PANTHER, PIRSF, Pfam, SMART, TIGRFAMs, Gene3D and SUPERFAMILY: are providers of hidden Markov models (HMMs). Your contributions are welcome. You are encouraged to use the ''''Add your annotation'''' button on InterPro entry pages to suggest updated or improved annotation for individual InterPro entries.

Proper citation: InterPro (RRID:SCR_006695) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006846

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.mitk.org/DiffusionImaging

A selection of image analysis algorithms for the processing of diffusion-weighted MR images. Features & Highlights * Tensor and q-ball reconstruction * Glyph visualization * Quantification and partial volume clustering of tensor and q-ball images * Global fiber tractography, visualization, and tract post-processing * Brain network statistics and visualization (connectomics) * Interactive exploration of Tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) results * Intra-voxel incoherent motion (IVIM) estimation * Synthetic data generation Additional system specific requirements: * Windows: If you have problems running the Windows application, please install the Microsoft Redistributable Packages for VS 2008: 32 bit or 64 bit * Linux: the Qt framework, version 4.6.2 or later Tested systems: Windows 7, Windows Vista; Ubuntu 12.04 and newer; OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard), OS X 10.8 (Mountain Lion) The OS X 10.6 installer is compatible with OS X 10.7 (Lion) so there is no dedicated disk image build under 10.7. The MITK Diffusion application is based on the MITK research platform and the most of it is open-source. The available code is embedded into the source code of MITK as a module and can be accessed through the public git repository.

Proper citation: MITK Diffusion (RRID:SCR_006846) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006873

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://bio.math.berkeley.edu/eXpress/index.html

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented January 29, 2018.
From website: "Note that the eXpress software is also no longer being developed. We recommend you use kallisto instead." Kallisto can be found at http://pachterlab.github.io/kallisto/.

Software for streaming quantification for high-throughput DNA/RNA sequencing.
Can be used in any application where abundances of target sequences need to be estimated from short reads sequenced from them.

Proper citation: eXpress (RRID:SCR_006873) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006809

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://biit.cs.ut.ee/gprofiler/

Web server for functional enrichment analysis and conversions of gene lists. Web based tool for functional profiling of gene lists from large scale experiments. Has web interface with powerful visualization. Used for analyzing data from any organism.

Proper citation: g:Profiler (RRID:SCR_006809) Copy   


http://socialbrain.wordpress.com/2009/09/30/neurovia-download-neuro-imaging-tools-software-brain-project-matlab-program-package-for-the-analysis-of-functional-neuroimages/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on June 24, 2013. These distribution sets contain software modules and/or data sets extracted from the Visualization and Analysis Software Tools (VAST) library developed at the Minneapolis VA Medical Center, the University of Minnesota and/or the International Consortium for Neuroimaging (INC) (partially funded by the Human Brain Project )

Proper citation: Software Distribution Sets (RRID:SCR_003465) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003408

    This resource has 500+ mentions.

http://www.scripps.edu/researchservices/dna_array/pages/Data_Analysis_GCOS.htm

Affymetrix has recently released a new software for the acquisition, management, and analysis of gene expression data. The new GeneChip Operating Software (GCOS) platform enables researchers to perform gene expression, SNP mapping and resequencing analysis with integrated data management and scalable client server configurations. * Compatible with additional Affymetrix analysis software such as Data Mining Tool (DMT) and GeneChip DNA Analysis Software (GDAS) * Supports Gene Expression, Resequencing and Genotyping Applications * Baseline Comparison Analysis Input: Affymetrix .DAT file Output: Affymetrix files (.CEL, .CHP, .RPT, .EXP, .TXT) Availability: The Core Facility has a copy of GCOS, as well as an older version of the Affymetrix software, Microarray Suite (MAS), available for use upon request.

Proper citation: GeneChip Operating Software (RRID:SCR_003408) Copy   


http://www.genetics.ucla.edu/labs/horvath/CoexpressionNetwork/

Software R package for weighted correlation network analysis. WGCNA is also available as point-and-click application. Unfortunately this application is not maintained anymore. It is known to have compatibility problems with R-2.8.x and newer, and the methods it implements are not all state of the art., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.

Proper citation: Weighted Gene Co-expression Network Analysis (RRID:SCR_003302) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003833

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

https://python-elephant.org

The Electrophysiology Analysis Toolkit (Elephant) is a Python library that provides a modular framework for the analysis of experimental and simulated neuronal activity data, such as spike trains, local field potentials, and intracellular data. Elephant builds on the Neo data model to facilitate usability, to enable interoperability, and to support data from dozens of file formats and network simulation tools. Its analysis functions are continuously validated against reference implementations and reports in the literature. Visualizations of analysis results are made available via the Viziphant companion library. Elephant aims to act as a platform for sharing analysis methods across the field.

Proper citation: Elephant (RRID:SCR_003833) Copy   


http://www.qub.ac.uk/schools/BioimagingCoreTechnologyUnit/NIVTA/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 29, 2016. A pan European network for virtual tissue archiving aimed at supporting clinical trials, biomarker research, tissue microarray analysis and virtual slide based education. NIVTA has state-of-the-art digital scanning systems including an Aperio CS system, Aperio OS system (one of only two currently available in Europe) and a Hamamatsu system with fluorescent scanning capability.

Proper citation: Northern Ireland Virtual Tissue Archive (RRID:SCR_004452) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_004453

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

http://discovery.hsci.harvard.edu/

An online database of curated cancer stem cell (CSC) experiments coupled to the Galaxy analytical framework. Driven by a need to improve our understanding of molecular processes that are common and unique across cancer stem cells (CSCs), the SCDE allows users to consistently describe, share and compare CSC data at the gene and pathway level. The initial focus has been on carefully curating tissue and cancer stem cell-related experiments from blood, intestine and brain to create a high quality resource containing 53 public studies and 1098 assays. The experimental information is captured and stored in the multi-omics Investigation/Study/Assay (ISA-Tab) format and can be queried in the data repository. A linked Galaxy framework provides a comprehensive, flexible environment populated with novel tools for gene list comparisons against molecular signatures in GeneSigDB and MSigDB, curated experiments in the SCDE and pathways in WikiPathways. Investigation/Study/Assay (ISA) infrastructure is the first general-purpose format and freely available desktop software suite targeted to experimentalists, curators and developers and that: * assists in the reporting and local management of experimental metadata (i.e. sample characteristics, technology and measurement types, sample-to-data relationships) from studies employing one or a combination of technologies; * empowers users to uptake community-defined minimum information checklists and ontologies, where required; * formats studies for submission to a growing number of international public repositories endorsing the tools, currently ENA (genomics), PRIDE (proteomics) and ArrayExpress (transcriptomics). Galaxy allows you to do analyses you cannot do anywhere else without the need to install or download anything. You can analyze multiple alignments, compare genomic annotations, profile metagenomic samples and much much more. Best of all, Galaxy''''s history system provides a complete analyses record that can be shared. Every history is an analysis workflow, which can be used to reproduce the entire experiment. The code for this Galaxy instance is available for download from BitBucket.

Proper citation: Stem Cell Discovery Engine (RRID:SCR_004453) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006677

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

https://madb.nci.nih.gov/

Microarray data management and analysis system for NCI / Center for Cancer Research scientists / collaborators. Data is secured and backed up on a regular basis, and investigators can authorize levels of access privileges to their projects, allowing data privacy while still enabling data sharing with collaborators.

Proper citation: mAdb (RRID:SCR_006677) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006793

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://genome.ucsc.edu/ENCODE

Encyclopedia of DNA elements consisting of list of functional elements in human genome, including elements that act at protein and RNA levels, and regulatory elements that control cells and circumstances in which gene is active. Enables scientific and medical communities to interpret role of human genome in biology and disease. Provides identification of common cell types to facilitate integrative analysis and new experimental technologies based on high-throughput sequencing. Genome Browser containing ENCODE and Epigenomics Roadmap data. Data are available for entire human genome.

Proper citation: ENCODE (RRID:SCR_006793) Copy   



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